posted on 2019-09-04, 14:31authored byL Lamy, R Prangé, C Tao, T Kim, SV Badman, P Zarka, B Cecconi, WS Kurth, W Pryor, E Bunce, A Radioti
Throughout 2017, the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) observed the northern far-ultraviolet aurorae of Saturn at northern solstice, during the Cassini Grand Finale. These conditions provided a complete viewing of the northern auroral region from Earth and a maximal solar illumination, expected to maximize the ionosphere-magnetosphere coupling. We analyze 24 HST images concurrently with Cassini measurements of Saturn's kilometric radiation and solar wind parameters predicted by two magnetohydrodynamic models. The aurorae reveal highly variable components, down to timescales of minutes, radiating 7 to 124 GW. They include a nightside-shifted main oval, unexpectedly frequent and bright cusp emissions, and a dayside low-latitude component. On average, these emissions display a strong local time dependence with two maxima at dawn and premidnight, the latter being newly observed and attributed to nightside injections possibly associated with solstice conditions. These results provide a reference frame to analyze Cassini in situ measurements, whether simultaneous or not.
Funding
L. L. thanks Linda Spilker for her support to the original HST proposal, Fannie Serrano and Pauline Richard, who investigated short‐term dynamics of Saturn's aurorae during their internship at LESIA, and Gabby Provan for useful discussions on the inexhaustible topic of kronian magnetospheric periodicities. The French coauthors acknowledge support from CNES and CNRS/INSU programs of Planetology (PNP) and Heliophysics (PNST). S. V. B. was supported by an STFC Ernest Rutherford FellowshipST/M005534/1. The research at the University of Iowa was supported by NASA through contract 1415150 with the Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
History
Citation
Geophysical Research Letters, 2018, 45 (18), pp. 9353-9362
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING/Department of Physics and Astronomy
The UV observations were obtained from the ESA/NASA Hubble Space Telescope (GO program 14811): the original data can be retrieved from the MAST archive and the processed data from the APIS service hosted by the Paris Astronomical Data Centre at http://apis.obspm.fr. The Cassini/RPWS and MAG original data are accessible through the PDS archive at https://pds.nasa.gov/. The HFR processed data are available through the LESIA/Kronos database at http://www.lesia.obspm.fr/kronos.